Guiding Star is South African singer/songwriter
Vusi Mahlasela's sixth album overall -- and his second to be issued in the United States. This record seems to be a priority for his label, ATO. Rightfully so. When
The Voice -- his first set for the label -- was issued in 2003, they were hopeful; it was thought that based on his appearance in the Amandla! film, and given his reputation as one of the premier poets and musicians coming out of South Africa, that he'd be a natural with American audiences. To its credit, ATO is a "stick by its artists no matter what" outfit, and the label knows talent.
The Voice did reasonably well for an indie, and was widely celebrated critically. Yet, as good as it was,
Guiding Star stands head and shoulders above it, and the music will speak that to anyone who hears it. ATO is trying to underscore this on the sleeve of the CD, accenting a few of the many guests who appear here. American audiences will recognize
Dave Matthews,
Derek Trucks, and
Ladysmith Black Mambazo, and some will recognize
Xavier Rudd. There is a problem with this kind of marketing, however. African music and world music purists might mistakenly think that these appearances water down
Mahlasela's Afro-pop magic, and that these "special guests" are added only as a commodity. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Matthews' voice has a high profile since he is a duet partner on "Sower of Words" (the only track he appears on), but it's a hell of a song, no matter who is singing it. The other folks mentioned contribute a guitar or a backing vocal here and there. In other words, they collaborated with
Mahlasela, not vice versa. With the exception of
Ladysmith on "Heaven in My Heart" and
Black Moses Ngwenya on "Ntombi Mbali," sung in Zulu, anyone might have stepped into almost anyone else's shoes here; that's how focused and pronounced
Mahlasela's vision is, making virtually everything else interchangeable.
That said, these are only a few of the session players on
Guiding Star -- there are 35 listed in the credits from all over the world and this does not include the African groups the KCC Choir or the Hlanganani Brothers! What this makes for is an African recording that truly embraced the musicians of the world and invited them into its musical terrain. From cut to cut,
Guiding Star is simply stunning. This album was primarily recorded on farms, mostly in South Africa but elsewhere around the globe, too, at
Mahlasela's insistence. As for the lyrics, a fair number of these tunes are in English -- this also was at
Mahlasela's insistence -- but nearly half are either in Zulu, Sotho, or Pedi.
Mahlasela's voice floats across its enormous range; he expresses all emotions in the grain of his voice and never has to reach too far, because his vocalizing is the very fabric of emotion itself. While the aforementioned tracks were cited by name as examples of performance personnel, virtually all of the 16 cuts here -- 15 songs and a bonus track -- are interchangeable in terms of quality. There is no critical distance needed here; this is easily
Mahlasela's finest effort. It exists at the cultural crossroads where African pop and folk musics use and enrich one another, while inviting the rest of the globe in for an unforgettable listening experience. ~ Thom Jurek